Discourse priming of homophones in individuals with dominant subcortical lesions, cortical lesions, and Parkinson’s disease


Autoria(s): Copland, David A.; Chenery, Helen J.; Murdoch, Bruce E.
Data(s)

14/04/2001

Resumo

An on-line priming experiment was used to investigate discourse-level processing in four matched groups of subjects: individuals with nonthalamic subcortical lesions (NSL) ( n =10), normal control subjects ( n =10), subjects with Parkinsons disease (PD) ( n =10), and subjects with cortical lesions ( n =10). Subjects listened to paragraphs that ended in lexical ambiguities, and then made speeded lexical decisions on visual letter strings that were: nonwords, matched control words, contextually appropriate associates of the lexical ambiguity, contextually inappropriate associates of the ambiguity, and inferences (representing information which could be drawn from the paragraphs but was not explicitly stated). Targets were presented at an interstimulus interval (ISI) of 0 or 1000ms. NSL and PD subjects demonstrated priming for appropriate and inappropriate associates at the short ISI, similar to control subjects and cortical lesion subjects, but were unable to demonstrate selective priming of the appropriate associate and inference words at the long ISI. These results imply intact automatic lexical processing and a breakdown in discourse-based meaning selection and inference development via attentional/strategic mechanisms.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:12685

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Psychology Press

Palavras-Chave #Clinical Neurology #Psychology #Clinical #Lexical Ambiguities #Basal Ganglia #Sentence Comprehension #Behavioral-changes #Ambiguous Words #Aphasia #Language #Context #Deficits #Access #321025 Rehabilitation and Therapy - Hearing and Speech #380302 Linguistic Processes (incl. Speech Production and Comprehension) #380102 Learning, Memory, Cognition and Language #730303 Occupational, speech and physiotherapy #C1
Tipo

Journal Article